Southern Oregon
Pii!p Hiil Surrey
Under Way Here
A urey to determine the
usability of a puip miil oper
ation ;n southern Oregon is un
derway in the valley by Sand
we.l r.d Company, Inc. Van
router, B C , a-:cordir. to Don
McNe..'. grar.acer of the Jackson
CO-Bty Chamber of Commerce
Te ompanv has been em
ployed v trie, chamber of Jack
cn ard Joephine coun:rs and
the Oregon Develnprr.en rom
ir if t;'on to make the ti.rvey in!
n?or to 'trrmire 'he economic ;
fea-lbiii'y rf e'tablifhin? such
mill. McNeil a:d.
fin Stay
f.r5t Mtep of the study is
"compilation of pulpwood re-
noiines available in the area, i
particularly wood residue from!
rxistinc sawmills,'' the company
faid. Work which can be done!
from public records in Portland
already is under way.
"The second step," thp compa
ny wrote "is analyze the plup-l
wood resources data to deter-:
mine how laree an operation the j
area ran support from a raw ma- j
terial a'anripoint. We will then !
determine whether an economic
unit rn he established."
To Have intorar.ation i
t ...... ,,.r,ni nr.r. o Washington V
b economically available, we ! Energy Commissioner Willard
will proceed to a studv of other! F- Libby said today the basic
Xoaideratior... including site I choice on continuing nuclear
li-ahilitv water .unnlv. efflu-1 tests is: Run the "very small'
nt d p a
S7
HARMONY LUNCH President Eisenhower ana House
Minority Leader Rep. Joe Martin (left) exhibit smiling
approval as they dig in to a $1.19 chicken and potato box
lunch in the House Caucus room in Washington. Martin
was host at the harmony lunch designed to improve re
lations betwten the chief executive and the Republican
rank and file.
Continuing Nuclear
Tests Said To Give
Nation Basic Choice
a:r pollution and
transportation fa'tors. If these
eon:draiiori can be success
full resolved, we will proceed
wi'O estimate of capital costs,
O aoufacturina costs and gross
return on ineatment for the
trot finable type of develop
ment for each area."
McNeil said the chambers have
eaked to have information ready
on p-isible si teg when the com
pany sends men here for field
work this lummer.
Pertinent general data on
Austria! locations already
a'.ailahl at the chamber.
In-is
Russia Exploits
American Delay
London ffi The Soviet
Union today exploited a delay
in presenting new American
d:.iarmament plan with propa
ganda atatements aimed at
cashing in on worldwide fear of
further nuclear weapons tests.
The United Nations five-na-tton
-subcommittee on disarma
ment was mcetini this afternoon
when Harold E. Stassen. the
American disarmament repre
sentative, rray present the new
US plan.
Ttussia. via Moscow Radio,
sent out a stream of atatements
to Europe and Asia affirming
Moscow's willingness to dispense
with further atom and hydro
gen bomb tints.
It was understood tha Stassen
proposal calls for a halt to nu
clear test explosions and sug
gests a system of aerial recon
naissance by Soviet planes over
soma- eight Western European
nations as part of President Ei
senhowers original "open skies"
inspection plan.
risk from radioactive fallout or
risk annihilation by an enemy.
Libby told the House-Senate
Atomic Radiation subcommittee
that "testing constitutes a small
risk very small compared to
ordinary risks which can be tol
erated." But the famed scientist
stressed in his prepared state
ment that "it is not contended
that there is no risk."
"Are we willing 'o take this
very small and rigidly con
trolled risk?" he asked. "Or
would we prefer to run the risk
of annihilation which might re-,
suit if we surrendered the
weapons which are so essential
to our freedom and our actual
survival?"
Libby traced the history of
AEC sponsored research on fall
out aimed at getting "truth, sci
entific truth," about it. He said
the commission's "Sunshine"
project on fallout is "one of the
most impressive scientific inves
tigations ever made."
He said there is general agree
ment on the amount of radiation
received from the fallout, the
amount of the long-lived fission
product strontium-90 deposited
in the human body and the
amount still in the stratosphere.
Atomic' "These essential points are
generally agreed and the ques
tions under debate are really
largely political and sociologi
cal," he said.
"The cause for real concern is
not the deleterious effect of ra
diation resulting from weapons
tests, but rather what would be
the effect of the infinitely great
er amount of radiation which
would result from the massive
use of nuclear weapons in war
fare," he said.
He contended that the critical
and essential question demand
ing a "political and sociological"
answer is are the risks of fall
out "tolerable."
Five-Cent Hourly
Pay Raise Seen
In Lumber Industry
Portland IP A pay raise of
five cents an hour appeared to
be shaping up today for lumber
industry employees on the Pa
cific Coast.
The pay hike was attained
Tuesday for workers of two
large companies with widespread
operations in Oregon, Washing
ton and California.
.The AFL-CIO Lumber and
Sawmill Workers and the AFL
CIO International Woodworkers
of America reached the settle
ments in separate negotiations
with the Georgia-Pacific Corpor
ation and the Willamette Valley
Lumber Company.
Vacation Provisions
The new pacts call for five
cent hourly raises effective June
1 and some minor improvements
in vacation provisions.
They also provide for re-opening
of wage talks next October
I.
The agreements are subject to
ratification by union members.
About 5.000 LSW employees
are covered in the Georgia-Pacific
settlement and nearly 1,000
in the Willamette Valley opera
tions. Figures were not immed
iately available on the number of
IWA members affected.
The pay hike sets the new
minimum wage scale in the in
dustry at S2.03 an hour and the
average scale at S2.37.
Churches United,
Graham Points Out
New York W Billy Gra
ham brought the first three
weeks of his New York Crusade
to a triumphant close Tuesday
night with the comment that
"not in 40 years have the Chris
tians and their churches been so
gloriously united to save their
fellow men."
"Never before in my ministry
have I seen God move so won
derfully, so gloriously to save
His children." the 38-year-old
evangelist said.
More than 17,500 persons
heard Graham's sermon on cov
etousness in Madison Square
Garden. The sermon was to have
marked the midpoint in the cru
sade, but Graham announced
Monday the revival will run
three weeks longer than plan
ned, until July 21.
Attendance at the sermons in
the first 21 days has run over
the 374.500 mark, or an average
of 17,800 nightly. . Tuesday
night's 536 "decisions for
Christ" brought Graham's total
of conversions to 12.148 or an
average of 578 each night.
1 Wednesday, June S. 19S7
MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE SEVEN
U.S. Said To Have No
Long-Range Policy
Indianapolis, Ind. (W
The United States has no long
range foreign policy to match
Soviet Russia's well-planned
blue-print for action, a South
American statesman said.
-Galo Plaza, former president
of Ecuador, told the 72nd an
nual meeting of the Holstein
Friesian Association of America
Tuesday that the people, not the
government, of the U.S. are re
sponsible. "This is not the fault of your
goverment; you cannot put the
blame on the President or on the
Congress or on the State Depart
ment," Plaza said. He said the
people were to blame.
Plaza is president of the Hol
stein Friesian Association of
Ecuador.
Warned by Benson
Washington V Secretary
of Agriculture Ezra Taft Benson
warned today turkey. grors to
stop depending on the govern
ment to bail them out of low
price markets.
He told them to curtail sharp
ly the hatch of turkey poults to
avoid production of a crop in
Manila Investigates
Red Tape in Drugs
Former Ziegfeld
Star Dies in South
Inverness, Calif. Oft Mary
May Hastings, one-time Ziegfeld
star and former wife of actor
Richard Barthelmess. died Tues
day at her Inverness home at
the age of 56.
Known on the stage as Mary
Hay, she entered the Ziegfeld
Follies as a teen-aged chorus
girl and quickly became a star
on stage and screen.
Shortly after winning success
in Hollywood, she married Bar
thelmess, with whom she had
played in "Way Down East."
She divorced him in 1928.
Her second marriage was to
Vivian Bath, a Singapore rubber
tycoon. That marriage also end
ed in divorce. Her third mar
riage was to Richard Hastings, a
San Francisco socialite.
j Children of Naval
Employee Threatened
Manila HP President Car
los P. Garcia today ordered an
immediate investigation of the
charges that government red
tape was holding up release of
anti-influenza drugs from the
United States
The drugs, a gift of the World i .. Tokv W An American
Medical association, arrived here I Navy emP.vee m Japan has
Tuesday to help combat the flu! ar"cadcd hls nome with
epidemic that has claimed 5B6 ,,bed Wlre af,er receiving
lives at latoct eo,,t anrf m,H. l! and letters threatening to
TlirlriV ftrAWArf Jome 400.OOO others ill. !cut hlf iouT youngsters "in
lUIACy UlUWCIi The Philippine Medical associ- pieces' .
ation, an atliliate of the world I 15 uougias f . scott. an
body, charged that the shipment ! employee of Yokosuka Naval
of 267 pounds of drugs was being ;Base located 40 miles south of
held up at Manila airport. j Tokyo.
ocou torn United Press by
telephone that he and his wife
had received a threatening tele
phone call and letter with an
obscure message that he did not
understand. A native of North
Taipeh, Formosa IP Na-; Hollywood, Calif., he said he
tionalist China warned Britain worKed at China Lake, Calif.,
excess of consumer demand at j today that British ships will en- j Delore coming to Japan in 1955.
reasonaoie prices to producers, ter Chinese Communist ports at
"The t,rkey industry rannnt their own risk,
count on government buying in j The warning coincided with
every year as a part of its mar- the lifting of the British trade
ket outlet." Benson said "In-: ban with Peiping, effective to
stead. all operatives in the in-1 dav.
Britain Warned of
Risk in Shipping
Painter Unwillingly
Performs Circus Act
New York HP A building
painter unwillingly did a rope
trick today which outdid most
circus acts. He hung upside
down 10 stories over Times
Square from a rope twisted
around his neck.
Milton Hinden, 35, of Brook
lyn, escaped with only rope
burns on his neck after his
painting scaffold collapsed.
He grabbed one of the scaf
fold pulley ropes while fallin?
and managed to hang on until
rescued by firemen and fellow
workers.
Hinden was one of a crew
giving the Astor theater at
Broadwav and 45th St. a face
lifting. When he fell, the rope
he grabbed twisted around nis
neck and body and left him
dangling upside down.
As morning rush-hour crowds
watched, fellow painters rigged
a scaffold below him. Firemen
arrived, reached Hinden from
an aerial ladder and freed him.
Hinden took the rest of the
day off "to settle my nerves."
Brewster Aparent
Winner in Revolt
San Francisco W Frank
Brewster, apparent winner in an
East Bay move to oust him as
president of the Western Con
ference of Teamsters Union, is
ejected here Thursday for a
top-level meeting concerning his
reform program.
Th 33-member nolicy board
will hold a two-day session pre
liminary to the conference's an- ,
nual meeting June 2i-i in san
Diego.
Rrewster averted a full-scale
revolt of San Francisco Bay
Area teamsters Tuesday nigni
by recommending a reform pro
gram in a letter from Seattle to
the Bay Area Joint Council of
Teamsters.
Brewster "humbly admitted
the Senate Committee investigat
ing labor rackets "brought to my
attention several shortcomings
regarding the financial manage
ment of the conference."
dustry breeders, hatcherymen
and turkey growers should
make every effort to avoid over
production for better returns in
the open market.
The department bought about
26 million pounds of surplus!
A Nationalist military spokes
man. Read Adm. Liu Ho-Tu, said
there is no change in National
ist China's seven-year-old deter
mination to seal off Red China
ports.
Nationalist vessels and shore
ready-to-cook turkeys in 1956 in! batteries on Matsu and Quemoy
an attempt to hWstrr market have been able to maintain par
prices for live birds. The turkeys tial blockade. Several British
were used in the school lunch ; and other foreign vessels have
program. been damaged.
America's
Favorite
Toast
.te& it
Us
to your
good health"
EI
CREAM
NECTAR
WINE
hMncri m4 MM j tnaj Cjfjuntlu. Out 12, Htuia
"NOW IS THE TIME"
ADD THAT PATIO, SIDEWALK, CARPORT OR
ANY TYPE OF CONCRETE CONSTRUCTION
CALL FOR
LININGER'S
READY-MIX
CONCRETE
ALWAYS UNIFORM IN QUALITY
To Insure Our Customers Prompt Service, All
Mixer Trucks Are Equipped With Two-Way Radio
ASK US FOR ESTIMATES
READY-MIX CONCRETE
Ph. Med. SP 2-5336 or SP 2-5897 Ph. Ash. MU 5-8121
Crew Swim Ashore
After Fire on Ship
Sydney, Australia IP Sev
en crewmen swam ashore from
the 870-ton Panamanian freight
er Sea Pearl which caught fire
Monday off the northern coast
of New Guinea, it was reported
today.
The American skipper, whose
name was not available here,
and 14 other members of the
crew took to the lifeboat. A
search plane spotted the lifeboat
just off shore and dropped a
message directing the seamen
to a nearby mission.
OLDEST POLICEMAN DIES
Greenville, Tenn. HP G. I.
Biddle, 90, believed to have
been the nation's oldest active
policeman, died Monday night.
Merlin Company Buys BLM Timber
One of two tracts offered for
sale by the Medford district of
the bureau of land management
at an oral auction timber sale on
June 4 was purchased by Bate
Lumber company. Merlin, Ore.
This tract contained an esti
mated volume of 650 thousand
board feet and sold at the ap
praised price of $14,238.90. The
sale was held for the purpose of
removing trees that are hazard
ous to travel on the newly con
structed Galice access road. The
no bid sale consisted of fire
killed timber in the Sykes Creek
area. This tract will be held
open for bids for 90 days.
On June 13 eight tracts con
taining an estimated 30.203,000
board feet will be offered for
sale. Four of these sales are lo
cated in Jackson county, two in
Josephine county and one each
in Douglas and Klamath coun
ties. Seven more tracts with a vol
ume of approximately 27,700.000
board feet will be offered for
sale on June 20. Three of these
sales are located in Jackson
county, two in Josephine county
and one each in Douglas and
Klamath counties.
Additional information regard
ing the no bid sales or the pro
posed sales for June may be se
cured by contacting the bureau's
district office in the Medford
eitv hall.
D0WT BUT
ANY FURNACE
until you see the
OIL
FURNACE
COME IN OR CALL...
WESTERN OIL
& BURNER CO.
of Mtdford, Oregon
412 I. Miin Phen SP 2-S266
I
Family Fares $& Money
on the CITY of PORTLAND
?0 CHICAGO and CAST
Big Family
Pays Off!
But there's real sarins when
two or more people in a fam
ily group trarel en Union
Pacific's Family Fare plan.
Good when boarding ANY
V. P. train on Monday, Tues
day. Wednesday or THURS
DAY. Return any day and
there's a generous baggage
allowance. Ask us for details.
u. r). TOOMEY.
General Traffic Aftent,
207 Medical Center Bld(.,
Phone SP 3-SDSS. Medford. Ore.
jfjfl
I 16
Fa.t 2iex's .Day
MEN'S
CUFF LINKS
Large assortment of styles in attractive gift
boxes.
$100
PAIR 1 Plus tax
MEN'S
MEN'S WHITE
Dress Shirts
Sanforized, long - wearing, mercerized
broadcloth. Collar guaranteed to out
wear the rest Of the shirt.
AN OUTSTANDING VALUE
$198
EACH I
Ism--
3
i BILLFOLDS
Made of long-wearing plastic in a
large assortment of styles.
EACH
59
t
Plus tax
Sport Shirt TIES
Each fa)
Rayon ties in popular colors with t large selection of slide
MEN'S
SHORTS
Made of sanforized broadcloth
in solid colors, stripes and as
sorted prints. Sizes 30 to 40.
EACH
69
FATHER'S DAY
CARDS
Large Selection
Best Values
Each
10
3 for $2 QS TACKLE BOXES
MEN'S COTTON ARGYLE X 13" metal boxes 'deal for fishing tackle or tools.
SOCKS Eafhl With Inside Tray I Each
Beautiful colors in sizes I0'4
to 12.
Regular Pair 59c
SALE $
PRICE
3 Pair 1
USE OUR LAYAWAY PLAN
Buy now at these low prices and pay laterl A small
deposit will hold your purchase until you're ready to
pick it up. Ask any of eur clerks about itl
MEN'S
Sport Shirts
Sanforized, short sleeve novelty
plaid shirts.
A BIG VALUE
$169
EACH I
STORE HOURS: Daily - 9:30 to 5:30 p.m.
LISTEN TO
THE WOOLWORTH HOUR
Every Sunday 12 to 1 P.M. - STATION KYJC
39 NORTH CENTRAL AVENUE
MEDFORD, OREGON